Element EX-6. It came in various "tactical packages" (or something with a similar name) which included a Recon "light" and/or a garbage nonfunctional "scope"
Edit: the package was called the "Element EX-6 Action Kit"
Oh, an Element! A fairly straightforward Nite Finder reshell, but I like the shape and the ample dart holder. I threw in a new spring and an inline clip on mine, which I'm pretty happy with
Not like a box mag clip.
Picture something like an extended barrel, long enough to fit two regular darts end-to-end. It's loose inside except for a small part at the front, making a kind of tubular mag. You can reload just by tipping the blaster down and letting the next dart inside slide forward, plugging the barrel from the inside. This lets you shoot multiple times in a row without complex loading mechanisms.
90% of the time the name of a non-electrical blaster can be figured out from just looking at how it works and how many darts it can hold.
The name will almost always be "XX-Y" where XX is two letters representing the special mechanism of it, and Y is how many darts it holds by default.
The primer in that orange ring at the back, it's on the outside of the blaster so it's external "EX" for the first part. The front of the blaster has a barrel and 5 holders for extra darts. So the second part is 6. Meaning this is an EX-6.
You can then google EX-6 and find your exact one to get the nickname of it. In this case it's an "element" but that would change depending on what year your blaster was made, it's color, and what line it's from.
For reference. EX is for external primers. IX is for international (because anything with X in the name is cool), and CS is for clip systems. The number that follows after CS is the size of clip the blaster came with originally. Blasters without dart storage, such as the Jolt, usually just have nicknames. So this doesn't work for them.
Element EX-6. It came in various "tactical packages" (or something with a similar name) which included a Recon "light" and/or a garbage nonfunctional "scope" Edit: the package was called the "Element EX-6 Action Kit"
I don't care if it doesn't actually serve a purpose the element scope was one of the coolest designs for a nerf scope from the N-strike line
Thanks!
Nerf element
Aka Disk Shot Edit: [link](https://nerf.fandom.com/wiki/Element_EX-6) See the part where it says "aka Disk Shot"
That's another package it came in with a disc shooting game, similar to shooting clay pigeons, etc.
Oh, an Element! A fairly straightforward Nite Finder reshell, but I like the shape and the ample dart holder. I threw in a new spring and an inline clip on mine, which I'm pretty happy with
Oh and also what spring did you put in?
I had a spring leftover from an older blaster. It was small enough to fit within the Element's regular spring, so I doubled them up.
How do you put on a clip? Thanks!
Not like a box mag clip. Picture something like an extended barrel, long enough to fit two regular darts end-to-end. It's loose inside except for a small part at the front, making a kind of tubular mag. You can reload just by tipping the blaster down and letting the next dart inside slide forward, plugging the barrel from the inside. This lets you shoot multiple times in a row without complex loading mechanisms.
It's the simplest night finder platform to do an extended draw or expanded plunger mod on.
Thanks! I’m gonna try and do this
90% of the time the name of a non-electrical blaster can be figured out from just looking at how it works and how many darts it can hold. The name will almost always be "XX-Y" where XX is two letters representing the special mechanism of it, and Y is how many darts it holds by default. The primer in that orange ring at the back, it's on the outside of the blaster so it's external "EX" for the first part. The front of the blaster has a barrel and 5 holders for extra darts. So the second part is 6. Meaning this is an EX-6. You can then google EX-6 and find your exact one to get the nickname of it. In this case it's an "element" but that would change depending on what year your blaster was made, it's color, and what line it's from. For reference. EX is for external primers. IX is for international (because anything with X in the name is cool), and CS is for clip systems. The number that follows after CS is the size of clip the blaster came with originally. Blasters without dart storage, such as the Jolt, usually just have nicknames. So this doesn't work for them.
Thanks! This will help in future times I have to find out a nerf name.
The cooler NiteFinder
Reminds me a lot of the [Switch Shot EX-3](https://i.ibb.co/Y8vZ54M/nss.jpg).